Not sure, I do prefer the convertible in practice, but perhaps having a less bulky slate will be nice in some circumstances. I do like the built in kickstand over lugging a cooler master riser around with me.

there are trade offs for both:

T902 pros:

-convertible (nice built in keyboard, and adjustable angle on the lap.)
-modular bay gives more storage options, or more battery life.
-more battery life or- I assume, with the larger battery and similar voltage CPU. Broadwell might be efficient enough to even it out, but if both are under heavy use case, the T902 larger battery will pull through.
-self-upgradeable

CC2 Pros:

-higher res!
-Better Digitizer tech
-can be used as a cintiq on any computer as well
-thinner and lighter
-built in kickstand
-more powerful integrated GPU

Which one is more powerful is yet to be seen. 28 watts on the CC2 and 35 watts on the T902, but there is a gap of 2 generations there, so the more efficient newer CPU's may actually surpass the T902 in benches, but sustained load depends on how well they cool their system under load.

If it surpasses in power, that would be enough for me to make a slate a part of my workflow. I had to adjust to a convertible, I'm sure I could adjust to a slate. Especially one with a kickstand.

Click to expand...

Well, if the T902's anything like my T901 even after repasting it, it's going to have some thermal throttling issues under heavy loads because Fujitsu's stock HSF is woefully inadequate. I won't know for sure until my T902 arrives this afternoon to succeed my T901.

I can only hope the CC2 doesn't do the same; too many slates these days are crippled by inadequate thermal performance. *cough*Surface Pro 3*cough*

It should be noted that the CC2's external monitor functionality already puts it a cut above every other Windows tablet PC simply because I can still use the screen and digitizer on something that doesn't have painfully weak hardware, especially GPU. You know, something like my water-cooled gaming desktop.

If you don't mind lugging around two computers at once, what's to stop you from carrying around a separate workstation or gaming laptop for heavy-duty work while the CC2 itself handles lighter loads by itself? Performance AND portability, the next-best thing to widespread dockable GPUs! (Yeah, I wish...)

The only thing I won't like too much about the CC2 is having to carry around a separate keyboard and stand, especially since nobody makes a slate keyboard these days that's even half as good as the old Compaq TC1000/HP TC1100 with its huge swivel hinge and inconspicuous clipping onto the back of the system. However, for just doing art stuff, it should be easier to manage with the CC2's side keys for modifiers and shortcuts that I usually keep the keyboard on my T901 available for.

The i5-5300U and i7-4600U are more or less equivalent due to thermal throttling, and the Intel 5500 GPU performs about 10%-20% better than the 4400 GPU. I guess the hassle of purchasing and installing Windows 8.1 Professional could account for 120 €.

OS language
Is there an easy way to change the languagu of Win8.1? And I want to change the language outside GUI as well so I'm not sure if language pack can do that? The store charges 35 € for that so not bad I think...

The Sierra Wireless spec sheet says the 73xx modules that Fujitsu sells with the T935 are 2.7mm deep, while the 77xx are 4.75mm deep. I hope you're buying from a reputable vendor because those 77xx modules might not actually fit inside the T935.

The Sierra Wireless spec sheet says the 73xx modules that Fujitsu sells with the T935 are 2.7mm deep, while the 77xx are 4.75mm deep. I hope you're buying from a reputable vendor because those 77xx modules might not actually fit inside the T935.

They seem to change the SSDs in the company since Fujitsu only sells T935 with 512 GB SSD and they offer 1000 GB.
I wonder if I could change that myself anyway? Only used Thinkpads for the last 10 years and with them it is so easy...